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John Laurens
Wolcott When he started he was
probably the only person in the
community serving as an undertaker. Part
of the reason for that is there just wasn’t enough business to go
around. In a small community like
Throughout much of his early
career people
were buried in
His first burial was in 1843, the
infant child of Absalom McClung, whose body was carried to the cemetery. Until 1845 all bodies were carried to the
cemetery. It wasn’t until that year that the first horse drawn hearse
was used
by Wolcott and the Ferre brothers. Early
in his career funerals and burial tended to be pretty simple and quick. Embalming was extremely rare and bodies were
often buried the next day. By the end of
his career more embalming was being done and funerals had become more
formal
and complex. Until 1870 he built his own
coffins, almost always out of walnut and lined with cloth.
The quality of the cloth depended on what the
family could afford. Some costs
associated with a funeral in the 1840’s, were coffins for 6 to 8
dollars, a
hearse for $2.50, a funeral lot for $10.
By the 1880’s the coffin was 12 to 16 dollars, the hearse
was $8 and a
plot at Evergreen was 50 to 60 dollars.
In fact, he held two patents, one for a display case to
sell coffins and
another for removable handles so they could be used to take the coffin
to the
grave and then used again.
A newspaper interview in 1883,
Wolcott was asked two questions that seem to hold interest to many
about the
funeral business. One was about gruesome
deaths and the other about fear of the dead or ghosts.
On the second question he pointed out that
this was what his father did and from a young child he was accustomed
to dead
bodies. He also had some stories about
unusual burials to answer the first. One
concerned a worker for Barber’s Mill who got caught up in the machinery
and
ground up and dumped on the lower floor.
Wolcott said they had to use brooms and shovels to gather
the body and
when put in the coffin it was a “shapeless mass”. The
other was the drunk who lay down on the
track and was run over by the C&A train to Wolcott was also widely
known as an apiarist, or
beekeeper. Wolcott kept bees for both
pleasure and profit. He recalled in an
1883 interview that he was one of the very first beekeepers in the
county. Wolcott said that during his forty
years in
apiary that he had as few as six colonies some years and as many as one
hundred
and eighty at other times.
The profit in bees was in honey, and
to some degree in wax. Weather was always
a concern for the beekeeper. A harsh
winter
would mean not enough blooming clover or other plants that bees liked
to
produce the honey necessary to keep the colony going.
Wolcott said that 1871 or 1872 was his worst
time in the bee business.
Wolcott kept careful records of his
colonies in his daily journals, often referring to them as “little
chaps”, or
when they might sting someone, as a “little cuss”.
In 1883 Wolcott made $350 dollars from his
bees, almost all profit, but his main line of work during all this time
was the
undertaking business. Until the last year of
his life Wolcott lived as a respected
businessman and community leader. He was
a well known and active Mason in the same group as the Ferre brothers. He was an ardent Republican and a regular at
church. But in August of 1887, the aging
and frail John Wolcott had to deal with the tragedy of his son William
being
accused of killing another man.
William was about 45 at the time of
the incident, a widower with children who lived in a boarding house
operated by
a Mr. George Kurtz, 24 years old.
Apparently, in violation of house rules William was trying
to take a
bucket of beer to his room when confronted by Mr. Kurtz.
Though there was some conflicting testimony, it
was clear that Mr. Kurtz died of a knife wound.
William spent four months in the county jail awaiting
trial. In his father’s daily journal can
be found
entries about taking food to William as well as seeking legal help.
After almost four months, the trial
began on November 29, and on November 30 the jury found William guilty
of
manslaughter and sentenced him to five years.
In Wolcott’s journal the entry read, “The jury gave
William a verdict of
five years. I am surprised he is
satisfied with it.”
On the same day he was visited by
the doctor and the next day’s entry commented that he was still sick. For three of the next four days there is no
entry, unheard of for a man who kept a daily account of his life. From then until December 19 there are a few
sporadic mentions of his health and one about William leaving for
prison. On December 19, in his
daughter’s handwriting, “Father died
at 6:30 pm”. He was buried three days
later in
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